Medieval Fashions: Knight’s Lady

C11 is doing her presentation at the feast on medieval fashions. She had made a fabulous start, creating a hand sewn costume for her medieval peasant doll. It had taken her much longer than anticipated, leaving only three weeks until the date of the feast to have her next costume completed by. This costume was to be a far more complicated one for a knight’s lady. We were both somewhat panicked by the lack of time.

Nevertheless she swiftly made the chemise from muslin and a dress from white embroidered cotton. These were completed quite quickly as she had done similar designs for her peasant doll. Bearing in mind she created her own patterns, she did an amazing job:

Showing the muslin chemise underneath the over dressAnd the over dress

She didn’t finish the arms on the over dress as she had wanted them to be long and floaty and wasn’t quite sure how she could create that. Because of time constraints we chose to use a felt fabric rather than the preferred velvet because it would not need hemming. She easily created a violet skirt by cutting a rectangle, folding over the top, stitching, threading with elastic and pulling tight:

C sewing her skirtHer half made skirt

She had wanted the skirt to be slit down the middle to reveal the white embroidered cotton dress underneath but when I found some silky purple material she panelled that in instead:

Pretty, isn’t it?

And this is where work ceased. She had done all her skills would allow her to do and at this point was really struggling for motivation.

We had been here once before during this project, but this time I too was stuck. I was not an experienced enough seamstress to be able to instruct her. So each night I took her dolly and played, created, unpicked, played and created some more (with a whole heap of unpicking at various intervals) until I at last managed to put together something resembling a bodice:

It looks so simple, but it took me hours to do

And we were off again. This project has definitely been one of team work and, whilst C probably would have preferred it to have been all her own work, I had a ball interfering! In fact, interfering taught me something. It taught me how having time and freedom to experiment is when the very best learning occurs. Unfortunately the presentation is next week and there was simply not the time to give C to experiment as she had done with her peasant dolly. I don’t sleep and I have hours to play around in the evening, so I tried to help her out. The reality is, that whilst I succeeded getting the project off the ground again (so to speak) I prevented C from learning the valuable lessons which come from trial and error. And worse, I had robbed her of the feeling of achievement which comes from a project done pretty much entirely independently.

Once the bodice was done, everything else began to fall into place. Long arms were sewn from rectangles of purple silk and attached at the base of the embroidered cotton arms previously sewn:

Her long floaty arms

We made a simple belt from the same material, stitching it in place at the back and we were almost finished!

Here she is standing ready for the banquetAnd a photo of the frontAnd the back

C11 had wanted her lady to have a fur cloak. It took me a while to find something which would work as fur. We do have a huge fake fur sheet but T uses it a lot for all his plays and was loath to give C even a small part of it. I have three boxes full of old clothes I have kept for the purposes of sewing and patchwork and eventually found an old coat which had a fur-lined hood. I ripped the fur off and together C and I made a simple cloak:

The cloak, made from purple silk and pink furThe Lady wearing her cloakAnd the back

Finally we made her head-dress by simply hemming a sheet of muslin on three sides, folding the fourth side down, sewing and threading with elastic and pulling really tightly to bunch up the fabric. The elastic was secured with a few stitches and then cut. This was then attached to a material covered bun:

A close up front onAnd side on

We had finished, and neither of us could quite believe how well it had turned out:

Isn’t she beautiful?We both just loved how she turned out!

And here are both the peasant dolly and the Knight’s lady, side by side awaiting C11’s presentation. Something for C to be very proud about, don’t you think?

Both dolls were made from scraps of material, old peanut sacks and ripped up old clothing and didn’t cost a penny to make. I’m so proud of my little girl and I promise next time to not interfere (although, you should know, I had jolly good fun doing so…!)

Wow. This is totally beyond me. I’m so, so impressed. I think there’s a balance to be struck between helping our children with something they’re struggling with so that they meet certain deadlines, and letting them learn from trial and error. I think your help was warranted in this case, given the time constraint. C will get many more opportunities to experiment with similar projects so don’t beat yourself up for helping! 🙂

She is SO beautiful! C has done such a wonderful job and her skills at sewing are going to be with her and grow all of her life. She is going to remember this project all of her life. too. I love seeing the two dolls together. How lucky your guests for the feast are!

They both look amazing. You both did a great job figuring out all of the odds and ends of pattern drafting (which I have to admit I don’t know much about aside from general shapes needed for certain pieces).

The pattern drafting was particularly hard, and although the pictures don’t show the mess, it was also very messy. Hopefully each time we do something like this our skills will improve. It was fun learning though.

She is beautiful! Both dolls clothing turned out great – I’m so impressed with all the layers – the costumes were clearly quite a bit of work. With C’s new skills, she’ll be able to experiment more with fashion and sewing after the presentation – I hope we get to see what else she comes up with 🙂

Fantastic! C did such a wonderful job of turning some bits of cloth into beautiful clothing. Even more impressive is she did it with no patterns. WOW!

And as far as your helping, I think it is great. Everyone needs a helping hand now and then. She knows she did most of it on her own, and without a doubt, given more time, she would have been able to finish on her own. Even the fancy clothing designers have assistants. You are her mother and your mother’s heart couldn’t let her have an incomplete dress. That is not being a robber of achievement, my friend. That is being a mommy:)

It’s such a balance though, because C, I know, would have preferred to have done it alone, whereas L always, always prefers having me help. T never wants me anywhere near his projects and if I did help I think it would steal ALL his joy of project work.
I think next time C has decided to choose smaller, more manageable projects rather than large, longer ones.

Another excellent job! I love it! We’re studying the Middle Ages, too, and I find that your posts are so informative, I want to share them with my kids so they have a better understanding of the period.

I am an easily excitable, highly creative, coffee loving homeschooling mummy, who loves Jesus with all her heart and thinks her family are the coolest people ever made.
My blog is about them...and me...oh and my insane need for coffee.
Life is incredibly precious to me and I enjoy creating beauty in every. single. moment.

Contact Me

angelicscalliwags@btopenworld.com

Copyright

Copyright (2012-2017)angelicscalliwags.com

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.